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  • 16
    Jul
    2012
    3:09pm, EDT

    Funeral for a New Jersey soldier killed in Afghanistan

    Julio Cortez / AP

    Jeannette Gaston lays a rose on top of the casket of her son, Army Spc. Jonathan Batista, during funeral services at Our Lady of the Magnificat, on July 16, in Kinnelon, N.J.

    Julio Cortez / AP

    Andrew Gaston, center, cries during funeral services for his brother, Army Spc. Jonathan Batista, at Our Lady of the Magnificat, on July 16, in Kinnelon, N.J.

    AP reports --  Jonathan Batista, a 22-year-old paratrooper, was on his first deployment to Afghanistan when enemy forces attacked his unit with small arms fire in Kandahar province on July 8. Batista was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 321st Airborne Field Artillery Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division at Fort Bragg in North Carolina.

    Julio Cortez / AP

    Pallbearers carry the casket containing the body of Army Spc. Jonathan Batista during funeral services at Our Lady of the Magnificat, on July 16, in Kinnelon, N.J.

    Related links:

    Slideshow - Afghanistan: Nation at a crossroads 2012

    2 comments

    War sucks!

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    Explore related topics: war, military, funeral, new-jersey, solider
  • 4
    Jun
    2012
    3:37pm, EDT

    US Navy marks the 70th anniversary of the Battle of Midway

    Mark Wilson / Getty Images

    Navy personnel stand at attention during a ceremony and commemoration of the 70th anniversary of the Battle of Midway at the U.S. Navy Memorial on June 4, 2012 in Washington, D.C.

    By Robert Hood

    U.S. naval forces had the initiative after the Battle of Midway. It really marked the turning point of the war in the Pacific.

    Jacquelyn Martin / AP

    WWII Battle of Midway veteran Henry Kudzik, 87, of Bethlehem, Pa., right, holds a photograph of a sinking destroyer, next to fellow veterans including Howard Snell, of Kingman, Ariz., during a Battle of Midway 70th Commemoration ceremony at the U.S. Navy Memorial in Washington on Monday.

    The Associated Press reports:

    Six months after the devastating attack on Pearl Harbor, Japan sent four aircraft carriers to the tiny Pacific atoll of Midway to draw out and destroy what remained of the U.S. Pacific Fleet. But this time the U.S. knew about Japan's plans. U.S. cryptologists had cracked Japanese communications codes, giving Fleet Commander Adm. Chester Nimitz notice of where Japan would strike, the day and time of the attack, and what ships the enemy would bring to the fight.

    The U.S. was badly outnumbered and its pilots less experienced than Japan's. Even so, it sank four Japanese aircraft carriers the first day of the three-day battle and put Japan on the defensive, greatly diminishing its ability to project air power as it had in the attack on Hawaii.

    Related

    • PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii - Navy marks Battle of Midway’s 70th anniversary
    • CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas – USS Lexington Marks 70th anniversary of the Battle of Midway
    • DULUTH, Minn. – Battle of Midway honored in Deluth

    Charleston S.C.’s WCBD TV speaks with John Hancock about his memories of the epic battle.

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    Explore related topics: navy, war, wwii, us-news, midway
  • 16
    Apr
    2012
    2:59pm, EDT

    Picking up pieces after 18 hour Taliban assault ends in Kabul

    Johannes Eisele / AFP - Getty Images

    Afghan policemen are mirrored in glass from a broken window as they stand guard outside the building where Taliban fighters launched an attack in Kabul on April 16.

    Slideshow: Afghanistan: Nation at a crossroads

    Ahmad Jamshid / AP

    More than ten years after the beginning of the war, Afghanistan faces external pressure to reform as well as ongoing internal conflicts.

    Launch slideshow

    Afghan President Hamid Karzai said on Monday that a coordinated Taliban attack showed a "failure" by Afghan intelligence and especially by NATO, as heavy street fighting between insurgents and security forces came to an end after 18 hours.

    Battles that broke out at midday on Sunday gripped the city's central districts through the night, with large explosions and gunfire lighting up alleys and streets.

    Though the death toll was relatively low considering the scale of the assault, it highlighted the ability of militants to strike high-profile targets in the heart of the city even after more than 10 years of war.

    --Reuters

    Related links:

    • PhotoBlog: Calm returns to Kabul after 18-hour gunbattle
    • Karzai says NATO failed as 18-hr Kabul attack ends

    A string of brazen attacks in Afghanistan left 36 insurgents, eight policemen and three civilians dead. NBC's Sohel Uddin reports.

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    Explore related topics: afghanistan, taliban, war, world-news
  • 12
    Apr
    2012
    8:35pm, EDT

    Afghan amputees reflect more powerful bombs

    Omar Sobhani / Reuters

    A disabled Afghan woman exercises with her prosthetic legs at the Orthopedic Center of the International Committee of the Red Cross in Kabul on April 11.

    Omar Sobhani / Reuters

    Afghan employees work on prosthetic legs at the Orthopedic Center of the International Committee of the Red Cross in Kabul on April 11.

    Omar Sobhani / Reuters

    Prosthetic legs are displayed at the Orthopedic Center of the International Committee of the Red Cross in Kabul.

    Omar Sobhani / Reuters

    Afghan amputees wait for treatment at an ICRC hospital for war victims at the Orthopedic Center of the International Committee of the Red Cross in Kabul.

    Gently massaging the soft flesh under his knees, 20-year-old Abdul Ahmat recalls the suicide bomb six months ago that destroyed his legs.

    "I stepped onto the street to head to work, when suddenly I became helpless. I knew I had lost my legs," the father of one said of the attack that killed 13 foreign troops and four Afghans in the capital, Kabul, in October 2011.

    Ahmat, who had come to Kabul from relatively peaceful Bamiyan province in search of work, spoke in a Red Cross orthopedic centre, one of the largest in the world and one of seven the humanitarian organization operates in Afghanistan.

    The free-of-charge centers log some 6,000 new patients every year, all of them Afghans. Of those, 1,000 are direct victims of war, many grievously wounded by the heightened potency of bombs.

    -- Reuters

    Related links:

    • Afghan amputees a grim signature of more powerful bombs

    Omar Sobhani / Reuters

    A disabled Afghan girl exercises with her prosthetic legs at the Orthopedic Center of the International Committee of the Red Cross in Kabul.

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    •Sign up for the msnbc.com Photos Newsletter

    19 comments

    It's alway the innocent women and children that suffer the attrocities of war while rich old men wave their dicks at each other.

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  • 19
    Mar
    2012
    4:52pm, EDT

    Hundreds of boots represent California servicemen and women killed in Iraq

    Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

    An Iraq war veteran holds pairs of combat boots that are part of the "Eyes Wide Open" exhibit in front of San Francisco City Hall on Monday in San Francisco, California. The Eyes Wide Open exhibition includes a pair of boots for every one of the 481 California servicemen and women who died in the Iraq war.

    Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

    People embrace as they stand among rows of combat boots that are part of the "Eyes Wide Open" exhibit in front of San Francisco City Hall.

    Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

    A photograph is displayed on a pair of combat boots that are part of the "Eyes Wide Open" exhibit in front of San Francisco City Hall.

    See more PhotoBlog posts related to the war in Iraq.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    1 comment

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  • 27
    Jan
    2012
    2:59pm, EST

    A Marine fights to stand after losing his legs in Afghanistan

    The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have created over 1300 amputees in the US military, according to the US Department of Veterans Affairs. Each one is a story of life-changing pain and rehabilitation. 

    Here, PhotoBlog highlights an unusually intimate report of one such story by Tampa Bay Times photographer Kathleen Flynn. Flynn followed Justin Gaertner, a U.S. Marine lance corporal who lost both legs to an explosion in Afghanistan, through several months of recovery. Those months included surgery, 40-hour weeks of physical therapy and an emotional reunion with fellow Marines.

    Kathleen Flynn / St. Petersburg Times

    Above: Jill Dalla Betta walks near her son Justin Gaertner as he wheels his prosthetic legs through the MATC at Walter Reed Medical Center in Washington DC in June 2011. Justin trains there Monday through Friday, 40 hours a week. The workouts consist of motions using weights and treadmills. Julie Castles, Justin's physical therapist, said he is one of her most motivated guys, almost to a fault. He'll keep working when he's hurting.

    Kathleen Flynn / St. Petersburg Times

    Above: Cpl. Austin Carter hugs Justin Gaertner as their unit returns from Afghanistan in May 2011. From the time he was injured by an IED in late November, Justin's goal was to be up on his prosthetic legs by the time his unit returned in early May. It usually takes above-the-knee amputees eight months to a year to be up and walking on their legs. Justin did it in four months. "Being able to see my boys come off the plane was my motivation to go in twice a day, every day," he said.  "And even going on the days that I'm supposed to have off I still go in every day and PT. Physical therapy, occupational therapy, work on my arm, work on my legs." Before the plane's arrival, Gaertner said, "I'm scared they're gonna tip me over they're gonna be so happy to see me."

    Kathleen Flynn / St. Petersburg Times

    Above: Gaertner holds his head for a moment after a morning workout at the MATC at Walter Reed Medical Center in Washington DC in June 2011. "I'm never really gonna get used to the pain," he said. "I can overcome it because I'm a Marine. But it's always gonna be there."

    The full story describes Gaertner's treatment at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. His mother stayed on campus too to help with his recovery:

    She wants him to see a counselor, but Justin says there’s nothing wrong. Doctors have asked him to arrange blocks and shapes, asked if he thought someone was trying to steal his soul, asked if he wanted to kill himself. They say he has short-term memory loss, problems focusing and a quick temper. “I don’t get mad very easily,” he says, “but when I do it just kind of — it goes from nothing to a lot real quick.”

    Justin does not take pain pills, says they’re for the weak. Doesn’t like sleeping pills either. Asleep, he is haunted by searing nightmares: the death of his fire team leader, the explosion beneath his best friend in the seconds before Justin lost his legs. 

    Kathleen Flynn / St. Petersburg Times

    Above: Gaertner gets a hug from his relative Cheri McPherson as he arrives at Tampa International Airport in May2011. "I'm really excited," she said. "I have not seen him. He's come a long way."  This is Justin's first visit home since he lost his legs to an IED in Afghanistan in November 2010. After two weeks he will return to Walter Reed to continue his therapy. Along with family and friends, Justin left the airport in a limo which took them to a VFW in Trinity where he was greeted with a party.

    Full coverage at the Tampa Bay Times includes many more pictures and a video.

    To see another Marine's life in the wake of war, look at this PhotoBlog post about Brian Scott Ostrom, who returned to the U.S. from Iraq with a severe case of post-traumatic stress disorder.

    And for more visual coverage ofAfghanistan, see our slideshow:

    Slideshow: Afghanistan: Nation at a crossroads

    Qais Usyan / AFP - Getty Images

    More than ten years after the beginning of the war, Afghanistan faces external pressure to reform as well as ongoing internal conflicts.

    Launch slideshow

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  • 12
    Jan
    2012
    1:57pm, EST

    Iraq War's legacy: One Marine's five-year battle with PTSD

    After serving four years as a Marine including two deployments to Iraq, Brian Scott Ostrom, now 27, returned home to the U.S. in 2007 with a severe case of post-traumatic stress disorder. “The most important part of my life already happened. The most devastating. The chance to come home in a box. Nothing is ever going to compare to what I’ve done, so I’m struggling to be at peace with that,” Scott said.

    Craig F. Walker / The Denver Post

    Brian Scott Ostrom cups his hand over his mouth as he tries to calm a panic attack at his apartment in Boulder, Colo., May 2011.

    Ostrom attributes his PTSD to his second deployment to Iraq, where he served seven months in Fallujah with the 2nd Reconnaissance Battalion. “It was the most brutal time of my life,” he said. “I didn’t realize it because I was living it. It was a part of me.”

    Craig F. Walker / The Denver Post

    Ostrom counts the stitches in his wrist while having a drink at a bar in Boulder, April 2011. He attempted suicide earlier in the week after he and his girlfriend had an argument. He said many times he should have died overseas, and during the fight with his girlfriend, she agreed.

    Craig F. Walker / The Denver Post

    Ostrom reacts to his apartment application being turned down in Westminster, Colo., May 2011. The leasing manager said he was sorry but couldn't allow him to move in because of an assault charge on his background check.

    Since his discharge, Ostrom has struggled with daily life, from finding and keeping employment to getting an apartment to maintaining healthy relationships. But most of all, he’s struggled to overcome his brutal and haunting memories of Iraq.

    Craig F. Walker / The Denver Post

    A picture showing Ostrom holding his little brother after graduating boot camp at Paris Island, S.C., in June 2003 hangs on the refrigerator at Scott's new apartment in Broomfield, Colo., May 2011.

    Craig F. Walker / The Denver Post

    Ostram shakes hands and talks with fellow veteran Mike Butler at a restaurant in Broomfield on Veterans Day. Veterans drank for free, and Scott was happy to find someone to talk with.

    Nearly five years later, Ostrom remains conflicted by the war. Though he is proud of his service and cares greatly for his fellow Marines, he still carries guilt for things he did — and didn’t do — fighting a war he no longer believes in.

    Editor's note: Msnbc.com took note of this exceptional photo story done by Denver Post Pulitzer Prize winning photographer Craig F. Walker because of its intimate, in-depth look at living with PTSD.  You can see many more of Walker's images, view video and read more about Scott Ostrom's story at the Denver Post website.

     

    Related Content:

    • When the war comes home - From combat in Afghanistan to their return home to Ft. Drum in upstate New York, photojournalist Erin Trieb profiles one group of soldier’s battle with PTSD.
    •  Ian Fisher: American Soldier - From high school to boot camp, photojournalist Craig F. Walker earned a Pulitzer Prize for his in-depth look at one Colorado teen's decision to enter the military.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    114 comments

    It's not right for us, as a society, to have these young men and women fight, bleed, and sometimes die for us and then essentially throw them on the streets when they come home when they need us most.

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  • 23
    Dec
    2011
    7:16pm, EST

    Andrew Laker / The Republic via AP

    Spc. John Lundy, right, and Spc. Matthew Sturgill, obscured, leap into the arms of Pfc. Devin Horton, left, Friday, Dec. 23, 2011, at Camp Atterbury in Edinburgh, Ind., as 109 members of the 1st Battalion, 149th Infantry, Army National Guard, prepare to board a bus home to Kentucky and join their families for the holidays. As part of the last soldiers to leave Iraq, the men arrived at Camp Atterbury on Dec. 21. The U.S. military announced Saturday, Dec. 17, 2011, that the last American troops have left Iraq as the nearly nine-year war ends.

    Home for the holidays, troops a bus ride away from joining their families

    By Natalia Jimenez, NBC News

    Some of the last troops to leave Iraq were just a bus ride away from joining their families for the holidays. They spent the last couple of days at Camp Atterbury in Edinburgh, Ind. According to AP, the base was used for returning troops for administrative and reintegration activities, as they officially come off active duty.

    Msnbc.com would like to hear from you. Click here to let us know if you’re one of the troops who are heading home or if you’re hosting a returning soldier for the holidays.

    See more recent coverage of the war in Iraq on PhotoBlog.

    32 comments

    To all who have served, ones just coming home, and others still fighting...... Thank You for your service. May God bless you, keep you, and the BEST HOLIDAY WISHES ! From just one American and his family. Feel free to pile on folks

    Show more
    Explore related topics: iraq, war, military, troops, soldiers
  • 19
    Dec
    2011
    2:41pm, EST

    Iraqi voices: Corruption in high places costs widow everything

    Editor's note: Photojournalist Kael Alford spent 10 months covering the invasion of Iraq and its immediate aftermath in 2003-2004. She returned this summer to see what has and hasn’t changed as the U.S. prepared to withdraw its troops. 

    By Kael Alford

    When I returned to Iraq for the first time in nearly eight years, I went immediately to the home of Karima Methboub to orient myself. It wasn’t easy to find. Like so many people in a country reshuffled by the cruelty of civil war, she had lost her home and, with all but one of her eight children, was eking out a bare-bones existence in a borrowed apartment in Baghdad.

    Karima’s children were safe, and doing quite well considering what the family had been through, a first-hand encounter with the deep corruption and dysfunction of the new Iraqi government: Karima’s second-oldest son, Ali, had been arrested in 2007 in a roundup of suspected “Sadrists” – militant supporters of firebrand Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr --  at a local café, starting a three-year rollercoaster ride that left the family homeless and deeply in debt.

    Kael Alford / Panos Pictures

    Duha and and Hibba, pictured here on the roof of their apartment, are 19-year-old twins with a force of energy that keep the house in constant motion. Duha is finishing her last year of high school while Hibba is in her first year of college. Hibba hopes to be a social worker and aid in divorce cases while Duha waffles between hoping for a job in a bank or a hair salon. Thanks to the insecurity in Baghdad, they spend much of their free time at home helping with house work and watching television, only occasionally dressing up and socializing outside in the neighborhood.

     


    Duha and Hibbe stop to talk to American soldiers at a checkpoint during a shopping trip in Karrada neighborhood, Baghdad, May 2003.

    I had met the Methboubs at the height of the “shock and awe” bombing campaign that launched the American invasion of Iraq in 2003. My life at the time consisted of rotating shifts in a drab hotel room with windows taped to keep them from shattering; anxious tours of destruction and bloody emergency wards on buses chartered by the Iraqi Ministry of Information; and nights interrupted by the nightmarish thunder of U.S. missiles incinerating targets a few miles from my bed.

     

    I had an assignment for an American magazine to profile an ordinary Iraqi family and was introduced to Karima through an acquaintance. Though I had a government minder in tow, I felt relief almost from the moment I arrived at her dim and dingy apartment. Despite their financial hardships – she was a widow living on government rations – she insisted on feeding me a lunch of bread and a thin soup She reserved the largest chunk of meat for me as her guest, though I insisted on passing it to her youngest son, 5-year-old Mahmoud.

    Kael Alford / Panos Pictures

    Karima Methboub keeps an eye on the air conditioner repairman. Karima has raised 8 children mostly on her own in a society that offers few opportunities for widows without a college education.

    Karima allowed me free rein of the house on the days when I photographed the children passing time in the apartment and hallway with inventive games. By the end of our visits, I felt like one of her kids. Those days shared with Karima, her squirming children and a mustachioed government man were the closest thing to normal that I found in Baghdad.

    When the capital fell to the U.S. Marines weeks later, I went to visit the Methboubs, something I also did frequently over the following two years. Their apartment became the place I went for direction, grounding and spiritual solace.

    During our reunion this summer, Karima described the family’s hardships since my last visit in 2004, most of which were centered around Ali’s arrest and the nearly three years he spent in prison.

    It happened after an Iftar feast during Ramadan in 2008, when Ali went to a neighborhood coffee shop to smoke a water pipe with his friends and his brother. Suddenly a joint patrol of U.S. forces and an anti-terrorism unit from the Ministry of Interior surrounded the café and told everyone to freeze.

    “It was something so scary,” Ali told me this summer. He said he tried to slip a licensed gun he was carrying to his brother Mohammed, who was sitting apart from the main group. “They hit me on the back, then in the face and tore my lip. Then they pulled my T-shirt over my head.”

    Then they took him to a prison in Amarah, a Sunni area of Baghdad.

    Kael Alford / Panos Pictures

    Ali is Kareema's oldest son. Last year he was arrested in a sweep operation in Baghdad along with a group of men sitting at a cafe who were accused of being members of the Mahdi Army. Although he was never formally charged, he was tortured and moved from prison to prison before his family could raise the bribes and fees to secure his release.

    He said he wasn’t charged, but was interrogated and tortured on a daily basis and eventually forced to sign a false confession connecting him to militia activities. He pulled back the hem of his jeans to reveal scars from puncture wounds in his shins where, he said, he was hit with a wooden board with a protruding nail shortly after his arrest.

    One officer in particular, a major, was crueler than the others, he said.

    “He shocked me (with electricity) in my ears, chest, even my sensitive places,” Ali said, adding that the torture finally led him to invent confessions. “I couldn’t handle it, so I admitted to anything … things I didn’t do, like I killed my cousin, my friends, I kidnapped a relative.”

    At one point, he said, American soldiers visited the prison and documented how he had been treated. He was allowed to see a doctor eventually, but was still not released. (Ali’s account matches systematic problems in Iraqi prisons documented in a 2010 Amnesty international report.)

    Ali was held for almost another year, the last six months at a local jail, where he was not treated as badly.

    During her son’s imprisonment, Karima was beside herself.

    “I was a crazy woman,” she said. “I couldn’t sleep at night, couldn’t work in the day. I could only think of getting Ali out of prison.”

    It took nearly three years -- and almost $50,000 U.S. paid to multiple prison officials – to finally win Ali’s freedom, she said. The officials never took money at the prison, she said, instead arranging meetings in other locations to take the bribes.

    Living on a diminishing widow’s pension, Karima said she had to sell everything she owned -- her apartment, furniture and family keepsakes – to raise the money. She also had to borrow money from relatives and isn’t sure how she will pay it back. The family now lives in the apartment of a sister who is living in the United States.

    Ali finally got his day in court in early 2010 and was released when the judge found insufficient evidence against him.

    Kael Alford / Panos Pictures

    Hibba does laundry in the family bathroom. Karima and her children had to sell their apartment where they have lived for years, to pay for the bribes required to get Ali released from prison. The apartment where they live now belongs to a Karima's sister who lives in the United States.

    His tribulations weren’t finished. Ali was lucky enough to get his old job back as a security guard at the Ministry of Electricity, but his superiors said he wouldn’t be paid until he could produce papers proving his innocence.

    As of July, he’d been back at work for several months without receiving a paycheck. Ali said getting documents that say he’s innocent will likely cost more money that he doesn’t have. In the meantime, he keeps showing up at work and keeps his head down.

    Karima’s is grateful to have Ali home and that her other children are OK.

    Her daughter Fatima, 22, who had left school at age 12 to help Karima with the other children, was living at home again. Her marriage fell apart as a result of domestic abuse. Fatima’s husband, “was banging her head against the wall,” according to Karima.

    Fatima’s uncles negotiated with her ex-husband’s family and reached consensus on the divorce.  That was nearly two years ago, but Fatima was still sleeping late and moping around the family apartment this summer. With only a primary school education, she can’t find decent work. She hopes to find a new husband, but divorce carries a stigma in Iraq, even when it stems from abuse.

    Despite the family’s trials, Karima had one success story to share.

    Her second-oldest daughter, Amal, was attending the American University in Sulaimani in northern Iraq (Kurdistan) on a scholarship obtained through the U.S. embassy and has survived her freshman year. 

    Kael Alford / Panos Pictures

    Amal Methboub, 20 (left) jokes with classmates in her English composition class at the American University in Sulaimani, northern Iraq. She is the recipient of a scholarship from the U.S. embassy that subsidizes her tuition. She hopes to be a lawyer and work with issues relating to Iraq's justice system and just finished her first year, a preliminary course in English that will prepare her language competency for the rest of her studies which will all be in English.

    When I first met Amal, she was already speaking English that she learned in school, and practicing with Americans she met. Another American journalist helped her apply for the scholarship at the university, a private school started by Kurdish Regional Prime Minister Baram Salih that offers instruction in English in hopes that a “neutral language” will help dissolve the divides between Iraq’s political and sectarian groups. 

    After what happened to her brother, Amal said she hopes to work in Iraq as a lawyer one day, fighting corruption in the court system. She said the first time she told an uncle she wanted to be a lawyer, he asked ‘Why? All lawyers are liars!’. Amal replied “No, I want to be a good one!” Their devotion to each other first drew me to this family, and after eight years I could see how that dedication had sustained them through their struggles. “My priority is my family,” said Amal, sitting on her dorm room bed when I visited her at school. She had developed the force of character I recognized in her mother. “And second is my studies. I have to focus on my studies to make my family proud of me.”

    More from the series:

    Introduction: As U.S. withdraws, the people speak
    For 'the Sheik,' U.S. pullout is cause for alarm
    Patchwork electrical grid a symbol of country's disconnects
    A new day for culture and consumer goods
    For women, freedoms under fire
    Suspicious minds in a squatters' camp

    Colonel helped with the ‘Surge,’ then his past came calling

     

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    41 comments

    I wish we could trade this family for the Obama family. We would definitely get the better of the deal.

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    Explore related topics: iraq, war, conflict, world-news, us-news, drawdown, featured, iraqi-voices
  • 19
    Dec
    2011
    2:41pm, EST

    Iraqi voices: For 'the Sheik,' U.S. pullout is cause for alarm

    Editor's note: Photojournalist Kael Alford spent 10 months covering the invasion of Iraq and its immediate aftermath in 2003-2004. She returned this summer to see what has and hasn’t changed as the U.S. prepared to withdraw its troops. 

    By Kael Alford

    For many Sunnis in Iraq, including a man I’ll call “the Sheik” to protect his identity, the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq is no cause for celebration. Rather it is fueling apprehension about basic security and the minority sect’s economic future.

    Kael Alford / Panos Pictures

    The Sheik has breakfast while his eldest son and heir Zaindon, 9, sleeps on the couch in their temporary Baghdad apartment. One day Zaindon will take responsibility for mediating conflicts and providing community leadership back in Anbar province.

    I met the Sheik in 2003 not long after the U.S. invasion of Iraq, when I broke curfew and slipped past the scary Iraqi security forces at the Palestine hotel and, with a driver assigned to me by the Foreign Ministry, ventured out for a glimpse at village life outside Baghdad. A writer I was working with had previously met the Sheik, who invited me to join them. Outside his village, near Ramadi in Anbar province, we encountered another ring of security – this time a checkpoint manned by Baath party regulars in their drab green uniforms. But here, even Saddam Hussein’s power had limits, outranked by an older code of tribal affiliations and family networks, and they let us through.

    In my early visits to the village I got glimpses of an idyllic life that residents enjoyed, so far not marred by the invasion -- feasts of fresh foods, wading in the Euphrates River with the Sheik’s family – but that soon changed.

    Kael Alford / Panos Pictures

    A photo of Zaindon in the clothing worn traditionally by a Shiek or tribal elder is shown on a cell phone. One day Zaidun will be a community leader following in his father's footsteps.

    Village elders had initially given U.S. troops safe passage through their area. That attitude changed within months as civilian deaths and raids on local homes by U.S. troops fueled resentment. By the end of 2003, neutrality had changed to open hostility, and roadside bombs and ambushes on the main road through Anbar earned it the name the “Highway of Death” because it was the scene of so many attacks against U.S. troops.

    I visited the area repeatedly to report on the uprising and checked in regularly with the Sheik. While his neighbors and members of his tribe were debating – and in some cases battling -- the U.S. occupation, he was focused elsewhere. The Sheik is a practical man and had many mouths to feed, so he decided to work with the Americans, figuring his construction business could benefit from some of the projects they were planning – building schools and roads or repairing basic infrastructure.

    The Sheik made trips to the “Green Zone” to seek reconstruction jobs, but didn’t have any success. He said the contracts were going to American companies, stoking further frustration in Anbar.  When I left Iraq at the end of 2004, the Sheik was still without work.

    When I returned in June, I found the Sheik and his family in a rented Baghdad apartment, very comfortable by Iraqi standards but nothing like the vaulted ceilings and marble floors of the family home in Anbar, with its vast garden and palm trees.

    Within a half hour of my arrival, the food started coming – roasted chicken, salads, bread -- only this time it arrived in plastic bags from a nearby restaurant rather than on platters from the kitchen, because the army of women in the family who used to prepare the meals were back in the village.

    Kael Alford / Panos Pictures

    Zaindon, 9, climbs through a window between the laundry room and his bedroom in the family's temporary Baghdad apartment while his younger sisters and a cousin watch. The children typically play indoors for safety reasons while their father has business in the busy capital. At home in Anbar, they had plenty of room to play safely outdoors.

    The Sheik told me had finally landed some reconstruction contracts related to a water treatment plant outside of Ramadi, but he moved his family to Baghdad because most of his business was in the capital and it wasn’t safe for them in Anbar.

    But he said he was concerned that his business contracts would be terminated after the American withdrawal, when the fractured and corrupt Iraqi government will take complete control of infrastructure projects and contract procurement.

    “I was given a chance to apply for an American visa, but I can’t leave Iraq” he said. “Too many people depend on me here.”

    Among them is the Sheik’s heir, 9-year-old Zaindon. It will be his responsibility to carry on the family name and traditions – not just a patriarchal euphemism in this culture. One day Zaindon will be a community leader responsible for helping to settle disputes in the village. The Sheik would like his son to learn English so he can study abroad.

    “My dream is to open a university in Iraq,” he said, explaining that providing better educational opportunities for young engineers is critical so that the next generation of talented people can stay and help the country to rebuild.

    But he was concerned with the deterioration of the security situation in his village and elsewhere in Anbar.

    Kael Alford / Panos Pictures

    The Shiek's wife cuts melon while her two oldest daughters Yehmameh, 7 left, and Tiba, 9, watch.

    When what was initially a mostly home-grown Iraqi insurgency became dominated by groups affiliated with militant Islam, many of them made up of foreigners, local leaders in Anbar eventually took security into their own hands. With the backing of U.S. forces, they formed “Awakening” councils – essentially Sunni militias capable of taking on the al-Qaida-inspired groups that had grown powerful in Western Iraq.

    The Sheik said most of the radicals arrested early on were released without prosecution, because there was rarely enough evidence for trials and people were too frightened to testify. That's led to a resurgence of the radicals and put pressure on the Awakening councils from two sides – from the radical groups and also from the central government, which is increasing arrests of Sunnis in the region under expanded de-Baathification purges.

    “Al-Qaida is distributing fliers again,” said the Sheik, “and although there is no way for them to reorganize like before, they are still active, only using quieter techniques, like sticky bombs that target specific vehicles and silencers on their weapons.” 

    Kael Alford / Panos Pictures

    The Shiek walks the grounds surrounding his estate along the banks of the Euphrates River in Anbar Province, May 2003.

    At the time of my visit, the situation was growing worse. We cancelled a trip to see the water treatment plant his company was working on when we got news that at least seven policemen had been killed in a drive-by shooting at a checkpoint west of Ramadi. Three were relatives from the Shiek’s village and he was occupied paying his respects to the families.

    And that incident was hardly isolated. A cursory Internet search for attacks targeting Iraqi police in Anbar province leads to websites of radical Islamist groups like Ansar Al-Mujahadeen, which posts videos, photos and detailed descriptions of operations carried out against Iraqi security forces in English.

    In light of the increasing insecurity and purges of Sunnis from government posts, Sunni dominated provinces are reconsidering their relationship to Iraq’s central government. The Awakening councils that reined in al-Qaida in western Iraq that were once on the American payroll are now paid by the central government, but members have been complaining of irregularities and bad treatment under the Shiite-dominated government. They have no official position in Iraq’s formal security structures and weak political representation, leaving them in limbo and even vulnerable to recruitment by Al-Qaida. Governing councils in the Sunni provinces of Salahuddin, where Saddam Hussein’s hometown of Tikrit is located, and Diyala have voted for increased autonomy from the central government, sparking demonstrations by Shiites in the latter province and feeding concerns that the tenuous Iraqi state could splinter along political and sectarian lines.

    But perhaps the most unsettling development in Anbar province is the resurrection and persistence of local radical Islamist groups that now target Iraqi security forces and Iraqi civilians as readily as they did American forces while they were in the country. These groups were unheard of in Iraq before the war.

    Like many Iraqis in western Iraq, the Sheik is convinced that Iran is supporting the radical Islamist groups in Anbar, citing the weapons they use and their choice of targets, including local Sunni shrines.

    As the Sheik sees it, that may be a long-term impact of the U.S.-led war and subsequent withdrawal that Washington never anticipated.

    “The Iraqi advisers misinformed the Americans when they first came” bringing Iraq closer to the interests of Iran and empowering Al-Qaida, he said. Now, “It’s only the politicians with loyalty to Iran who don’t want the Americans to stay.”

    More from the series:

    Introduction: As U.S. withdraws, the people speak
    Corruption in high places costs widow everything
    Patchwork electrical grid a symbol of country's disconnects
    A new day for culture and consumer goods
    For women, freedoms under fire
    Suspicious minds in a squatters' camp

    Colonel helped with the ‘Surge,’ then his past came calling

     

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    15 comments

    So we basically handed Iraq to Iran on a platter. We should have stayed out of that country in the first place.

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  • 18
    Dec
    2011
    1:38am, EST

    Moving out: Last US soldiers leave Iraq

    Mario Tama / Pool via EPA

    Soldiers from the 3rd Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division rejoice in the convoy staging area before departing Camp Adder, now known as Imam Ali Base, Dec. 17, near Nasiriyah, Iraq.

    From NBC News, msnbc.com staff and news services:

    Mario Tama / Getty Images

    The final section of the last American military convoy to depart Iraq from the 3rd Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division crosses over the border into Kuwait on Dec. 18, in Khabari Al Awazeem, Kuwait. Around 500 troops from the 3rd Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division ended their presence on Camp Adder, and departed in the final American military convoy out of Iraq.

    NBC News' Richard Engel tweeted from the border: "The gate to #iraq is closed. Soldier just told me, 'that's it, the war is over.'"

    The final column of around 100 mostly U.S. military MRAP armored vehicles carrying 500 U.S. troops trundled through the night along an empty highway, across the southern Iraq desert to the Kuwaiti border.

    The Iraq war began on March 20, 2003, at a time when national defense was a top priority for Americans still shocked by the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on U.S. soil. It continued with the invasion and ouster of Saddam Hussein, then ground through years of war against an insurgency that left tens of thousands dead.

    Lucas Jackson / Reuters

    U.S. Army soldiers perform a casing of the colors ceremony signifying the departure of the 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division as they depart in the last convoy from Camp Adder near Nasiriyah, Iraq on Dec. 17.

    Among those dead were nearly 4,500 Americans, and the war cost $800 billion from the U.S. Treasury. The question of whether it was worth it all is yet unanswered.

    "It's good to see this thing coming to a close. I was here when it started," Staff Sgt. Christian Schultz said just before leaving Contingency Operating Base Adder, 185 miles south of Baghdad, for the border. "I saw a lot of good changes, a lot of progress, and a lot of bad things too."

    "A good chunk of me is happy to leave. I spent 31 months in this country," said Sgt. Steven Schirmer, 25, after three tours of Iraq since 2007. "It almost seems I can have a life now, though I know I am probably going to Afghanistan in 2013. Once these wars end I wonder what I will end up doing."

    Read the full story here.

    • Related PhotoBlog posts

    Pool via Reuters

    Soldiers from the 3rd Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division hug while preparing to depart in the last convoy from Iraq at Camp Adder, now known as Imam Ali Base, near Nasiriyah, Iraq, Dec. 17. The last convoy of U.S. soldiers pulled out of Iraq on Sunday, ending their withdrawal after nearly nine years of war and military intervention that cost almost 4,500 American and tens of thousands of Iraqi lives.

    Maya Alleruzzo / AP

    U.S. Army soldiers from 3rd Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division, based at Fort Hood, Texas, inspect their body armor at Camp Adder during final preparations for the last American convoy to leave Iraq.

    Mario Tama / Getty Images

    Soldiers from the 3rd Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division secure equipment to a Mine Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) vehicle while preparing to depart in the last convoy from Iraq at Camp Adder, Dec. 17.

    Lucas Jackson / Reuters

    Soldiers from the 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division play football while waiting at a staging area in Camp Adder to be part of the last U.S. military convoy to leave the country near Nasiriyah, Iraq on Dec. 17.

    Mario Tama / Getty Images

    Specialist Matthew Hildebrandt from the 3rd Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division smokes while preparing to depart from Iraq at Camp Adder, Dec. 17.

    Lucas Jackson / Reuters

    Soldiers from the 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division celebrate through the roof hatches of their Mine Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) vehicles as they drive out on the U.S. military's last combat patrol in the country, at Camp Adder near Nasiriyah, Dec. 16.

    Mario Tama / Getty Images

    A soldier from the 3rd Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division cleans a housing unit to be turned over to the Iraqis while preparing to depart from Iraq at Camp Adder, now known as Imam Ali Base, Dec. 17.

    Mario Tama / Getty Images

    A soldier from the 3rd Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division, walks through the nearly deserted Camp Adder, now known as Imam Ali Base, on Dec. 16.

     

    11 comments

    Thank you troops. I wish you could all come home right now, but at least your out of that hellhole. However, no matter where you awesome guys and gals are,... THANK YOU.

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    Explore related topics: iraq, war, military, world-news, us-news, camp-adder
  • 16
    Dec
    2011
    1:57pm, EST

    Soldiers returning from Iraq are greeted by family members during a refueling stop in Maine

    Joe Raedle / Getty Images

    Specialist Cory Davis from Somersworth, N.H. is greeted by his mother, Beth Davis, as he arrives in Maine for a refueling stop as they make their way to Fort Hood, Texas after being one of the last American combat units to exit from Iraq on Dec. 16, 2011 in Bangor, Maine.

    US forces formally ended their nine-year war in Iraq with a low-key flag ceremony in Baghdad on Thursday. NBC's Richard Engel reports.

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: iraq, war, military, soldier, world-news, us-news, featured, fort-hood
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